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China to promote anti-corruption efforts at G20: minister

Thu, May 26, 2016 - 5:19 PM

China will push anti-corruption cooperation when it hosts this year's G20 summit, foreign minister Wang Yi said on Thursday, after it suspended an international anti-corruption task force because domestic companies declined to participate.

PHOTO: REUTERS

[BEIJING] China will push anti-corruption cooperation when it hosts this year's G20 summit, foreign minister Wang Yi said on Thursday, after it suspended an international anti-corruption task force because domestic companies declined to participate.

China suspended the task force, which had been drawing up G20 policies for increasing transparency of offshore financial structures, this year after taking over the G20 presidency, according to sources, who called it a setback to global efforts to crack down on shell companies.

China is one of several countries under pressure to share data on paper companies after the "Panama Papers", documents from Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca, revealed how the rich and powerful use such structures to avoid taxes and in some cases conceal ill-gotten gains.

As one of China's top 10 priorities for September's summit in the city of Hangzhou, Mr Wang said China would promote a three-pronged approach to anti-corruption cooperation, including formulating principles to chase down high-level fugitives, setting up a research centre on fugitives and stolen assets, and drawing up a 2017-2018 anti-corruption "action plan".

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"The three-pronged anti-corruption structure of establishing principles, mechanisms and operations, will ensure corrupt individuals in the G20 have nowhere to hide and no way to cover their tracks," Mr Wang told a news conference on the summit.

China has been trying to get increased international cooperation to hunt down suspected corrupt officials who have fled overseas since President Xi Jinping began a drive against deeply rooted graft more than three years ago.

But Western countries have been reluctant to help, not wanting to send people back to a country where rights groups say mistreatment of suspects remains a problem, and also complaining China is unwilling to provide proof of their crimes.

China has said it has talked with US officials about the case of Ling Wancheng, the brother of Ling Jihua, a former senior aide to retired president Hu Jintao.

Ling Jihua is facing charges on suspicion of taking bribes, illegally obtaining state secrets and abuse of power.

Ling Wancheng is in the United States, though he has denied through his US attorney that he handed state secrets to US authorities.